HIST 320(S) Adolescence in America
Adolescence, the time between childhood dependency and full social adulthood,
is a concept formalized in the late nineteenth century but a topic of concern
since at least the Middle Ages in Western culture. It is a moment in which
Nature threatens to escape from the mechanisms of social order, and the moment
at which the self-conscious and implicit elements of culture get passed on
to the future. With some attention to European history as a background, we
will focus on changing experiences of youth in colonial America and the United
States. Our hypothesis is that adolescence is a screen onto which are projected
many of the anxieties of a culture, and that we can read those projections
as evidence of larger cultural change. Our data will include autobiographies,
census data, artifacts of adolescent culture (schoolbooks, clothing, popular
music), social-science analysis, fiction, and films.
Evaluation will be based on contributions to class discussions, two short
essays, and midterm and final exams.
Groups A and D
Hour: TRACY